William Makepeace Thackeray
Barry Lyndon
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Table of contents
A BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
CHAPTER I. MY PEDIGREE AND FAMILY—UNDERGO THE INFLUENCE OF THE TENDER
CHAPTER II. I SHOW MYSELF TO BE A MAN OF SPIRIT
CHAPTER III. A FALSE START IN THE GENTEEL WORLD
CHAPTER IV. IN WHICH BARRY TAKES A NEAR VIEW OF MILITARY GLORY
CHAPTER V. BARRY FAR FROM MILITARY GLORY
CHAPTER VI. THE CRIMP WAGGON—MILITARY EPISODES
CHAPTER VII. BARRY LEADS A GARRISON LIFE, AND FINDS MANY FRIENDS THERE
CHAPTER VIII. BARRY'S ADIEU TO MILITARY PROFESSION
CHAPTER IX. I APPEAR IN A MANNER BECOMING MY NAME AND LINEAGE
CHAPTER X. MORE RUNS OF LUCK
CHAPTER XI. IN WHICH THE LUCK GOES AGAINST BARRY
CHAPTER XII. TRAGICAL HISTORY OF PRINCESS OF X——
CHAPTER XIII. I CONTINUE MY CAREER AS A MAN OF FASHION
CHAPTER XIV. I RETURN TO IRELAND, AND EXHIBIT MY SPLENDOUR AND
CHAPTER XV. I PAY COURT TO MY LADY LYNDON
CHAPTER XVI. I PROVIDE NOBLY FOR MY FAMILY
CHAPTER XVII. I APPEAR AS AN ORNAMENT OF ENGLISH SOCIETY
CHAPTER XVIII. MY GOOD FORTUNE BEGINS TO WAVER
CHAPTER XIX. CONCLUSION
A BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
Barry
Lyndon—far from the best known, but by some critics acclaimed as
the finest, of Thackeray's works—appeared originally as a serial a
few years before VANITY FAIR was written; yet it was not published in
book form, and then not by itself, until after the publication of
VANITY FAIR, PENDENNIS, ESMOND and THE NEWCOMES had placed its author
in the forefront of the literary men of the day. So many years after
the event we cannot help wondering why the story was not earlier put
in book form; for in its delineation of the character of an
adventurer it is as great as VANITY FAIR, while for the local colour
of history, if I may put it so, it is no undistinguished precursor of
ESMOND.In
the number of FRASER'S MAGAZINE for January 1844 appeared the first
instalment of 'THE LUCK OF BARRY LYNDON, ESQ., A ROMANCE OF THE LAST
CENTURY, by FitzBoodle,' and the story continued to appear month by
month—with the exception of October—up to the end of the year,
when the concluding portion was signed 'G. S. FitzBoodle.'
FITZBOODLE'S CONFESSIONS, it should be added, had appeared
occasionally in the magazine during the years immediately precedent,
so that the pseudonym was familiar to FRASER'S readers. The story was
written, according to its author's own words, 'with a great deal of
dulness, unwillingness and labour,' and was evidently done as the
instalments were required, for in August he wrote 'read for "B.
L." all the morning at the club,' and four days later of '"B.
L." lying like a nightmare on my mind.' The journey to the
East—which was to give us in literary results NOTES OF A JOURNEY
FROM CORNHILL TO GRAND CAIRO—was begun with BARRY LYNDON yet
unfinished, for at Malta the author noted on the first three days of
November—'Wrote Barry but slowly and with great difficulty.' 'Wrote
Barry with no more success than yesterday.' 'Finished Barry after
great throes late at night.' In the number of Fraser's for the
following month, as I have said, the conclusion appeared. A dozen
years later, in 1856, the story formed the first part of the third
volume of Thackeray's MISCELLANIES, when it was called MEMOIRS OF
BARRY LYNDON, ESQ., WRITTEN BY HIMSELF. Since then, it has nearly
always been issued with other matter, as though it were not strong
enough to stand alone, or as though the importance of a work was
mainly to be gauged by the number of pages to be crowded into one
cover. The scheme of the present edition fortunately allows fitting
honour to be done to the memoirs of the great adventurer.To
come from the story as a whole to the personality of the eponymous
hero. Three widely-differing historical individuals are suggested as
having contributed to the composite portrait. Best known of these was
that very prince among adventurers, G. J. Casanova de Seingalt, a man
who in the latter half of the eighteenth century played the part of
adventurer—and generally that of the successful adventurer—in
most of the European capitals; who within the first five-and-twenty
years of his life had been 'abbe, secretary to Cardinal Aquaviva,
ensign, and violinist, at Rome, Constantinople, Corfu, and his own
birthplace (Venice), where he cured a senator of apoplexy.' His
autobiography, MEMOIRES ECRIT PAR LUI MEME (in twelve volumes), has
been described as 'unmatched as a self-revelation of scoundrelism.'
It has also been suggested, with I think far less colour of
probability, that the original of Barry was the diplomatist and
satiric poet Sir Charles Hanbury Williams, whom Dr Johnson described
as 'our lively and elegant though too licentious lyrick bard.' The
third original, and one who, there cannot be the slightest doubt,
contributed features to the great portrait, is a certain Andrew
Robinson Stoney, afterwards Stoney-Bowes.The
original of the Countess Lyndon was Mary Eleanor Bowes, Dowager
Countess of Strathmore, and heiress of a very wealthy Durham family.
This lady had many suitors, but in 1777 Stoney, a bankrupt lieutenant
on half pay, who had fought a duel on her behalf, induced her to
marry him, and subsequently hyphenated her name with his own. He
became member of Parliament, and ran such extravagant courses as does
Barry Lyndon, treated his wife with similar barbarity, abducted her
when she had escaped from him, and then, after being divorced, found
his way to a debtors' prison. There are similarities here which no
seeker after originals can overlook. Mrs Ritchie says that her father
had a friend at Paris, 'a Mr Bowes, who may have first told him this
history of which the details are almost incredible, as quoted from
the papers of the time.' The name of Thackeray's friend is a curious
coincidence, unless, as may well have been the case, he was a
connection of the family into which the notorious adventurer had
married. It is not unlikely that Thackeray had seen the work
published in 1810—the year of Stoney-Bowes's death—in which the
whole unhappy romance was set forth. This was 'THE LIVES OF ANDREW
ROBINSON BOWES ESQ., and THE COUNTESS OF STRATHMORE. Written from
thirty-three years' Professional Attendance, from letters and other
well authenticated Documents by Jesse Foot, Surgeon.' In this book we
find several incidents similar to ones in the story. Bowes cut down
all the timber on his wife's estate, but 'the neighbours would not
buy it.' Such practical jokes as Barry Lyndon played upon his son's
tutor were played by Bowes on his chaplain. The story of Stoney and
his marriage will be found briefly given in the notice of the
Countess's life in the DICTIONARY OF NATIONAL BIOGRAPHY.Whence
that part of the romantic interlude dealing with the stay in the
Duchy of X——, dealt with in chapter x., etc., was inspired,
Thackeray's own note\books (as quoted by Mrs Ritchie) conclusively
show: 'January 4,1844. Read in a silly book called L'EMPIRE, a good
story about the first K. of Wurtemberg's wife; killed by her husband
for adultery. Frederic William, born in 1734 (?), m. in 1780 the
Princess Caroline of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel, who died the 27th
September 1788. For the rest of the story see L'EMPIRE, OU DIX ANS
SOUS NAPOLEON, PAR UN CHAMBELLAN: Paris, Allardin, 1836; vol. i.
220.' The 'Captain Freny' to whom Barry owed his adventures on his
journey to Dublin (chapter iii.) was a notorious highwayman, on whose
doings Thackeray had enlarged in the fifteenth chapter of his IRISH
SKETCH BOOK.Despite
the slowness with which it was written, and the seeming neglect with
which it was permitted to remain unreprinted, BARRY LYNDON was to be
hailed by competent critics as one of Thackeray's finest
performances, though the author himself seems to have had no strong
regard for the story. His daughter has recorded, 'My father once said
to me when I was a girl: "You needn't read BARRY LYNDON, you
won't like it." Indeed, it is scarcely a book to LIKE, but one
to admire and to wonder at for its consummate power and mastery.'
Another novelist, Anthony Trollope, has said of it: 'In imagination,
language, construction, and general literary capacity, Thackeray
never did anything more remarkable than BARRY LYNDON.' Mr Leslie
Stephen says: 'All later critics have recognised in this book one of
his most powerful performances. In directness and vigour he never
surpassed it.'W.J.
CHAPTER I. MY PEDIGREE AND FAMILY—UNDERGO THE INFLUENCE OF THE TENDER
PASSION
Since
the days of Adam, there has been hardly a mischief done in this world
but a woman has been at the bottom of it. Ever since ours was a
family (and that must be very NEAR Adam's time,—so old, noble, and
illustrious are the Barrys, as everybody knows) women have played a
mighty part with the destinies of our race.
I
presume that there is no gentleman in Europe that has not heard of
the house of Barry of Barryogue, of the kingdom of Ireland, than
which a more famous name is not to be found in Gwillim or D'Hozier;
and though, as a man of the world, I have learned to despise heartily
the claims of some PRETENDERS to high birth who have no more
genealogy than the lacquey who cleans my boots, and though I laugh to
utter scorn the boasting of many of my countrymen, who are all for
descending from kings of Ireland, and talk of a domain no bigger than
would feed a pig as if it were a principality; yet truth compels me
to assert that my family was the noblest of the island, and, perhaps,
of the universal world; while their possessions, now insignificant
and torn from us by war, by treachery, by the loss of time, by
ancestral extravagance, by adhesion to the old faith and monarch,
were formerly prodigious, and embraced many counties, at a time when
Ireland was vastly more prosperous than now. I would assume the Irish
crown over my coat-of-arms, but that there are so many silly
pretenders to that distinction who bear it and render it common.
Who
knows, but for the fault of a woman, I might have been wearing it
now? You start with incredulity. I say, why not? Had there been a
gallant chief to lead my countrymen, instead or puling knaves who
bent the knee to King Richard II., they might have been freemen; had
there been a resolute leader to meet the murderous ruffian Oliver
Cromwell, we should have shaken off the English for ever. But there
was no Barry in the field against the usurper; on the contrary, my
ancestor, Simon de Bary, came over with the first-named monarch, and
married the daughter of the then King of Munster, whose sons in
battle he pitilessly slew.
In
Oliver's time it was too late for a chief of the name of Barry to
lift up his war-cry against that of the murderous brewer. We were
princes of the land no longer; our unhappy race had lost its
possessions a century previously, and by the most shameful treason.
This I know to be the fact, for my mother has often told me the
story, and besides had worked it in a worsted pedigree which hung up
in the yellow saloon at Barryville where we lived.
That
very estate which the Lyndons now possess in Ireland was once the
property of my race. Rory Barry of Barryogue owned it in Elizabeth's
time, and half Munster beside. The Barry was always in feud with the
O'Mahonys in those times; and, as it happened, a certain English
colonel passed through the former's country with a body of
men-at-arms, on the very day when the O'Mahonys had made an inroad
upon our territories, and carried off a frightful plunder of our
flocks and herds.
This
young Englishman, whose name was Roger Lyndon, Linden, or Lyndaine,
having been most hospitably received by the Barry, and finding him
just on the point of carrying an inroad into the O'Mahonys' land,
offered the aid of himself and his lances, and behaved himself so
well, as it appeared, that the O'Mahonys were entirely overcome, all
the Barrys' property restored, and with it, says the old chronicle,
twice as much of the O'Mahonys' goods and cattle.
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!